Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
Seamus OBlimey wrote:compared2what? wrote:I, (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(f)
For orz' sake do you have to be so dramatic?
The fact that Nixon narrowly beat Humphrey in 1968 is the strongest evidence that the antiwar movement did not achieve its goals.
JackRiddler wrote:c2w:
XV. Your posts in this discussion (and elsewhere) are brilliant
(h) and of mildly awe-inspiring clarity and precision.
(i) Not to mention very thorough.
Your anger is justified and shared. In a word, what a crock!
JackRiddler wrote:Even the villains:
Khruschev > Osama
Dulles and McCloy > Cheney and Erik Prince (though equally sick)
compared2what? wrote:That review sent me into such a blind rage that I actually continued to shout and curse at 170-words-a-second in my mind for about three more hours after the first post. And in the grand database of ostensibly intellectual writers who should, imo, be required to be in compliance with all the stipulated conditions of the National Discourse Offender Registry Program , Gary Kamiya isn't even that bad, from a career-stats point of view. But if there is one thing I hate more than being talked down to, it's watching people pissing on the legacy of the very few serious political activists of that period who were not invented by J. Edgar Hoover, almost all of whom paid for their patriotism, literally or figuratively, with their lives. It's basically the equivalent of disrespecting the troops.
FourthBase wrote:compared2what? wrote:That review sent me into such a blind rage that I actually continued to shout and curse at 170-words-a-second in my mind for about three more hours after the first post. And in the grand database of ostensibly intellectual writers who should, imo, be required to be in compliance with all the stipulated conditions of the National Discourse Offender Registry Program , Gary Kamiya isn't even that bad, from a career-stats point of view. But if there is one thing I hate more than being talked down to, it's watching people pissing on the legacy of the very few serious political activists of that period who were not invented by J. Edgar Hoover, almost all of whom paid for their patriotism, literally or figuratively, with their lives. It's basically the equivalent of disrespecting the troops.
On a case by case basis we should be able to distinguish the wankers and provocateurs from the real deal, the retarded and destructive ideas from the true and useful ones. Don't we owe it to the latter to loathe and expose the former?
JackRiddler wrote:Moya:
Don't you insult Marilyn like that. First of all, she was rather like any woman in a bar, and that was her appeal. I find her quite charming to boot, and whatever the ditzy roles she played she was by accounts of those who knew her both clever and a searcher for meaning.
Anyway, perhaps the last star pushed by all media as a universal sex symbol who was allowed to maintain the lovely, healthy proportions of an actual woman, as opposed to the sad bony things tortured and paraded ever since by the fashion fascists (with well-known devastating consequences for generations of girls with eating disorders).
Bring back curves!
compared2what? wrote:
A flat-out large woman was not automatically outside the scope of consensus beauty standards in Hollywood by fiat then as completely as it is now.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 173 guests